The mysterious globe was discovered by a Belgian map collector.

A recently discovered globe from the early 1500s, carved onto ostrich eggs, may be the oldest globe of the New World ever identified, experts say.

Latin inscriptions dot its surface, and two small islands sit in the place of what we now know as North America. But the globe's origins remain a mystery.

After passing through the hands of a string of European map dealers, the artifact was purchased anonymously at a London map fair in 2012. Eventually, the rare find came into the possession of Belgian map collector Stefaan Missinne, who began to investigate it, he wrote in The Portolan, the journal of the Washington Map Society.

Previously, the earliest surviving globe was believed to be the Hunt-Lenox globe, which is made from copper and dated to between 1504 and 1506. The two globes share nearly identical labels and detailed contours, and Missinne argues this is no coincidence.

"There are differences between the two globes; however, when carefully considered these differences do not weigh against the suggestion that the Lenox Globe is a cast of the ostrich-egg globe," Missinne said in the journal article.

But globes created from ostrich eggshells are not common, and for this reason—regardless of its age—the artifact is rare.

In the New World globe, North America is made up of just two small islands.

Photograph courtesy Washington Map Society

Dating the Globe

To judge the age of the eggshell, Missinne consulted a radiologist, who helped him photograph and compare the density of the old shells—the globe is made of two connected shell halves—with the density of newer ostrich eggshells.

Because of the similarities between the two globes, Missinne hypothesizes that the newly discovered artifact came before the Lenox globe.

However, some cartographers are skeptical of the map's age because of its ambiguous history. The eggshell may date as far back as the 16th century, but that does not mean the map etched onto it is equally as old.

"It very well may be an early globe, which is interesting in itself, but provenance issues come to mind," said John Hessler, curator of the Geography and Map Division at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C.

"The first thing I would have wanted to know is where it came from—where it was purchased, who had it before, what collections it was in," Hessler said.

"The race for the first is something I tend to shy away from," he added, "but the bigger picture of the globe is more interesting to me than the single piece."

Beautiful. Artwork, history, geography, innovation, a real life stepping stone to the knowledge of the world through the eyes and mind of a human from the 1500's. How far we have come slow steady progress, but progress non the less.

I picture a surveyor and an artist on a long trip around the world and the best boiled egg they ever had and a 4 week trip back home and came up with a cunning plan of how to spend there time without being sea sick and bored :) I may be wrong though